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In any event, they are credited with introducing scarlet runner beans, apricots and horse chestnuts. They may also have introduced nectarines, and pineapples. Some also credit them with introducing cos lettuce (aka Romaine Lettuce) into England, but it was in fact already known there by the mid-1500s. What contemporary sources report is, in fact, is that they introduced a red variety. Tradescant the ElderJohn Tradescant the elder was born circa 1570, probably in Walberswick, Suffolk. Because the family was of Dutch origin, though, some feel it's possible he may even have been born in the Netherlands. He was born with one defect: he had no sense of smell.On 18 June 1607 in Meopham, Kent he married a woman named Elizabeth. In 1609, he started working for Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury (1563-1612.) In 1610 and again in 1611, he went to France and to the Netherlands to bring back fruit trees for the gardens at the Earl's residence, Hatfield House in Hertfordshire. He then worked for the second Earl of Salisbury, William Cecil, at Salisbury House in the Strand, London. In 1615, he started working for Edward, Lord Wotton, at St Augustine's Palace in Canterbury and stayed with him until 1623. While in Wotton's employ, he travelled to Archangel, Russia in 1618 and brought back botanical samples. Accompanying him was Sir Dudley Digges, whom he advised on gardens for his castle at Chilham. One of the things they brought back was larch trees. Tradescant was brought samples back from Virginia by a Captain Samuel Argall, who would become Governor of Virginia in 1617. Tradescant bought shares in several of the Virginia expeditions -- for instance in 1617, he purchased a £25 share. In 1620, Tradescant went to Algiers on a British Navy ship, the Mercury. It's on this trip, some believe, he brought apricot trees to England for the first time. In 1623, he started working as gardener for the first Duke of Buckingham, George Villiers, in New Hall, Essex (near Chelmsford) then at Burley-on-the-Hill. Villiers had arrived in London in 1614 at the age of 22, and become a lover of King James 1, who was 48 at the time. Villiers was a commoner, but King James made him a Duke in 1623. In 1624, Tradescant went to the Netherlands for the Duke of Buckingham. In May 1625, he joined the Duke of Buckingham in Paris to attend the marriage of Prince Charles to Henrietta Maria. King James had died a few months earlier, in March 1625, but Charles wasn't crowned king until the following year, in February 1626. In 1627, Tradescant travelled again with the Duke of Buckingham to France; they brought back poppies. Author "Philippa Gregory" now speculates that Tradescant may have had an affair with the Duke of Buckingham. But in any event, it all ended in 1628 when Buckingham was assassinated at Portsmouth; he was stabbed to death. In 1630, Tradescant secured an appointment working directly for Charles 1, as "Keeper of his Majesty's Gardens, Vines, and Silkworms" at Oatlands Palace, Surrey (near Weybridge.) At this time, Oatlands was the home of Charles 1's wife, Henrietta Maria. (Oatlands was demolished in 1649. Subsequent mansions were built there, and the last one to be built, in 1794, became a hotel in 1856 and is still a hotel today.) In 1633, Tradescant acquired Scarlet Runner Beans from Virginia, and started growing them at Oatlands as an ornamental plant for their flowers. On the south bank of the Thames, now part of London, Tradescant leased a house from the Dean of Canterbury. There, he started his own garden in 1826. He also started a collection of curiosities, which he left to his son. He called his collection the "Ark"; it took up several rooms in his house. He died 15/16 April 1638. Tradescant the YoungerJohn Tradescant the younger was born in Meopham, Kent on 4 August 1608, where his father and mother Elizabeth lived at the time. In 1619, at the age of 11, he was sent to the Kings School in Canterbury (where celebrity chef Anthony Worrall Thompson would go in the 1900s.) At the time, the family lived in Canterbury: his father was working for Edward, Lord Wotton at St Augustine's Palace in Canterbury. He married a Jane Hurte, by whom he had two children. He travelled to Virginia in America three times: 1637, 1642 and 1654 , where he acquired the rights to 100 acres of land. He brought back the Virginia Creeper bush, the yucca plant and the scarlet runner bean. Upon the death of his father in 1638, he took over as head gardener for Charles 1st and his wife Queen Henrietta Maria. He worked on the Queen's garden in Greenwich from 1638 to 1642. Work was interrupted when the Queen had to flee because of the civil war. Some speculate that Tradescant the younger may have grown pineapples there. At some point, he got married a second time, to a Hester Pooks (who died in April 1678 of drowning in their own pond at Lambeth.) He introduced to the UK the horse chestnut tree, the tulip tree, the pitcher plant, magnolias, the bald cypress, phlox and asters. He also added to his father's curio collection, and catalogued it on the suggestion of a lawyer named Elias Ashmole (1617 - 1692.) He also opened it to the public for a small admission charge, calling it the "Musaeum Tradescantianum." When Tradescant passed away on 22 April 1662 at South Lambeth, London, Ashmole ended up with the collection. Ashmole used the collection as the basis of the collection that started the what is now called the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. Tradescant elder and younger are both buried in the graveyard of St Mary-at-Lambeth Church, near the tomb of Captain Bligh (he of the ship Bounty fame.) Ashmole is buried there as well. The Church now is the Museum of Garden History. Other entries for: BiographiesAgnes Bertha Marshall, Ainsley Harriott, Alessandro Filippini, Alexis Benoit Soyer, Anthimus, Antony Worrall Thompson, Archestratus, Arnold Reuben, Athenaeus, Bartolomeo Scappi, Billy Reed, Catherine de Medici, Catherine Emily Callbeck Dalgairns, César Ritz, Charles Elmé Francatelli, Charles E. Hires, Charles Mason Hovey, Charles Ranhofer, Clarissa Dickson-Wright, Clementine Paddleford, Constance Spry, Delia Smith, Delmonico's Restaurant, Delmonico Potatoes, Dione Lucas, Egon Ronay, Elena Molokhovets, Eliza Acton, Eliza Leslie, Elizabeth Coleman White, Elizabeth Craig, Elizabeth David, Elizabeth Raffald, Fannie Merritt Farmer, Fanny Cradock, Francois Pierre de la Varenne, Francois Vatel, Gary Rhodes, Georges-Auguste Escoffier, Gino d'Acampo, Gordon Ramsay, Graham Kerr, Grimod de la Reynière, Harold McGee, Harumi Kurihara, Henry John Heinz, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Irma Rombauer, Isabella Mary Beeton, James John Howard Gregory, Jane Grigson, Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, Jean-Étienne de Boré, Jean-Pierre Clause, Jean Paré, Jennifer Paterson, John Cadbury, John Lawson Johnston, John Tradescant, Joseph Campbell, Josephine Garis Cochrane, Julia Child, La Maison Dorée, Laurie Colwin, Louis Eustache Ude, Louis Fauchère, Luther Burbank, Lydia Maria Francis Child, Madhur Jaffrey, Marcella Hazan, Margaret Costa, Marguerite Patten, Maria Parloa, Marie-Antoine Carême, Mars Family, Mary Randolph, Milton S. Hershey, Mithaecus, Nigel Slater, Nigella Lawson, Paul Blangé, Philip Harben, Pierre Blot, Pillsbury Bake-Offs, Platina, Raymond Calvel, Rufus Estes, Taillevent, Tate & Lyle, Thomas Laxton, Two Fat Ladies, Walter Tennyson Swingle, White Castle, William Cobbett |
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